In the lawsuit against Elephant Inc., the company that owns Platinum Plus, Solicitor William Walter Wilkins III, on behalf of the State of South Carolina, claims strippers performed “lewd and lascivious” acts, including oral sex, touching themselves and then putting fingers in front of customers’ noses and in their mouths, as well as putting their mouths on customers’ clothed genitals. Strippers also allegedly offered sexual intercourse inside and outside of club and offered oral sex for money.

According to the documents, strippers would touch their genitals and other strippers’ genitals for money, would expose their genitals for money, and simulate oral sex on patrons and other strippers.

The lawsuit claimed strippers would make appointments for customers for later dates to perform lewd acts.

It said alcohol was served to underage strippers and employees and was served to customers on Sundays.

A stripper admitted in her statement to supplying Adderall to other employees. Another stripper is accused of facilitating a sale of marijuana that was delivered off the premises.

According to the lawsuit, eight employees at Platinum Plus supplied a statement, saying there was prostitution at the strip club. Those statements claim strippers had sexual intercourse with customers and other strippers, strippers performed oral sex on customers and customers performed oral sex on strippers.

One statement from a champagne room hostess witnessed strippers exposing their genitals more than 100 times.

The lawsuit stated employees saw strippers frequently fired for engaging in sexual acts, only to be rehired “within a week or so.”

After the initial arrests on March 27, managers allegedly told employees that the arrests were, “not a big deal and everything would go back to normal in a couple of weeks.”

The lawsuit claims surveillance video from Platinum Plus’s own security camera catches a stripper performing oral sex on another stripper in the main room.

It also claims a stripper drove home drunk from the club after being helped to her car, which resulted in an accident that left her in a coma for three days.

According to court documents, managers demanded higher “tip-outs” from strippers caught in sexual acts and ignored the sex acts after receiving the money.

It also claims managers would have sexual relations with strippers in lieu of them paying nightly “tip-outs,” and the general manager didn’t fire one employee after she performed sexual acts.

The lawsuit claims Platinum Plus gave incentives to strippers to convince customers to purchase time in the Champagne Room and would promote a contest for the stripper who garnered the most dances. The winner would get a private dressing room for a month.